Charities worry new tax law will reduce donations

Charities and nonprofit organizations are worried that new limits on tax deductions for high earners will hurt donations just as charitable giving is starting to rebound from the depths of the recession.

Similarly, the higher tax rate on capital gains increases the incentive to donate securities to charity as a way to avoid those taxes, said Eugene Steuerle, a fellow at the Urban Institute who worked on the analysis.

The Pease limitation, meanwhile, should have a negligible impact on charitable giving because it is based on income, not on the amount of deductions, Steuerle said.

Nevertheless, nonprofits and charities are wary of any provision that could limit the charitable deduction.

"We just know that this change is definitely not going to be helpful," said Gloria Johnson-Cusack, executive director of Leadership 18, an alliance of CEOs of charities, non-profits, and faith-based organizations. "We don't think now is the time to be experimenting with a policy that has the potential" to reduce the incentive to donate.

Charitable organizations fear that even more tax changes could be coming as momentum builds in Congress to overhaul the tax code, to make it simpler and more transparent. So far, lawmakers have been wary of publicly targeting any tax break for elimination, to avoid generating opposition before the process gets started.

Leadership 18 is part of the Charitable Giving Coalition, a broad group of nonprofit organizations dedicated to preserving tax incentives for charitable giving.

"We are trying figure out the best way to address any kind of changes that they may be talking about that would act as a disincentive," Johnson-Cusack said. "We're real worried about it."

Taxes can play a role in how much people donate to charity, but other factors play a larger role, said Patrick Rooney, associate dean of the Indiana University School of Philanthropy.

"When you ask why people why they are donating, taxes are fairly far down on the list," Rooney said. "The key motivations are really to do things like feed the hungry and house the homeless and to support one's religious organization or to improve the quality of one's alma mater."

"The single biggest factor that would change giving is an improvement in the overall economy," Rooney said.

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Based on the reports I've read about the paltry amount of charitable giving
by the likes of Al Gore ($353 for all of 1997) and Joe Biden (Joe Biden and his
wife gave an average of $369 a year to charity during the past decade, according
to USA
More..